Dude, Doc. *brofist* I loved my (brief) stint on the Mk-19. It made me feel like Emperor Chang.
I also have a very high IQ, but I'm so lazy it's not particularly useful...
That's how I got through school, university, master's and job as a journalistI'm consider myself pretty lazy too, but my intellect counter balances that laziness with the ability to crank out really good work in a short amount of time.
Hello self.
As soon as I get a chance to fire it, you will have your video . My second Stryker (yes I am signed for over $5million in equipment) is in services so I have to ride in my crappy ambulance (which still weighs 32 tons).We need a video of Doc saying that. With the sniper's accent
I have a low IQ, so fuck that shit!Another time this was mentioned here, there also seemed to be a high amount of high IQ forumites. Maybe it's poll time?
I have a low IQ, so fuck that shit![/QUOTE]Another time this was mentioned here, there also seemed to be a high amount of high IQ forumites. Maybe it's poll time?
I have a low IQ, so fuck that shit![/QUOTE]Another time this was mentioned here, there also seemed to be a high amount of high IQ forumites. Maybe it's poll time?
I also have a very high IQ, but I'm so lazy it's not particularly useful...
As someone with a genius level IQ who's still trying to finish community college, I can tell you it's more a matter of attitude and hard work than you might think.I would think anyone with an advanced degree would have a higher-than-average IQ.
If only you could find something you liked.I have a super-genius IQ, can draw and paint, have trade skills out the wazoo (auto mechanics, plumbing, electrical), produce more innovative research than the rest of my department combined despite being lazy, have a terminal degree in physics (geophysics to be precise), exercise regularly, AND I'm damn good looking.
Plus, like Necronic and Chazwozel, I've always bragged that my superpower is to learn any new skill to competence extremely quickly.
(All this is counterbalanced by the aforementioned laziness and ennui.)
As someone with a genius level IQ who's still trying to finish community college, I can tell you it's more a matter of attitude and hard work than you might think. [/QUOTE]I would think anyone with an advanced degree would have a higher-than-average IQ.
Discalculia is same english and spanish. Er, I guess 'dyscalculia'..Also, you may find people like me who, when tested, have a very high IQ, but also have something that falls under the general and completely useless label of Discalculia (this is spanish, I don't know what the english word may be), wich is applied to a collection of simptoms, not causes, wich make me have a very hard time using numbers, calendars, maps and other similar stuff. Just to say a few examples, I learned one year ago wich seasons correspond to wich months and I've spent part of the current year thinking I was one year older than I am.
IQ can never be trusted to mean anything about a person.
Competent intelligence seems to be increasingly 'above average'I disagree completely. I have concluded after years of living on campus that higher degrees don't have anything to do with intelligence they just have to do with willingness to work. So as long as someone has at least competent intelligence and is willing to do the work he can get an advanced degree. (And yes I include JD and MD in that statement).
Discalculia is same english and spanish. Er, I guess 'dyscalculia'..Also, you may find people like me who, when tested, have a very high IQ, but also have something that falls under the general and completely useless label of Discalculia (this is spanish, I don't know what the english word may be), wich is applied to a collection of simptoms, not causes, wich make me have a very hard time using numbers, calendars, maps and other similar stuff. Just to say a few examples, I learned one year ago wich seasons correspond to wich months and I've spent part of the current year thinking I was one year older than I am.
IQ can never be trusted to mean anything about a person.
Competent intelligence seems to be increasingly 'above average' [/QUOTE]I disagree completely. I have concluded after years of living on campus that higher degrees don't have anything to do with intelligence they just have to do with willingness to work. So as long as someone has at least competent intelligence and is willing to do the work he can get an advanced degree. (And yes I include JD and MD in that statement).
Well no, you can't be below average in intelligence and get through Med School. It's really impossible. First you need pretty much a 3.5 -4.0 undergrad GPA, then there's the MCAT, then there's Med School, then there's Boards, then there's residency, then there's Step 3's. I agree, it's a lot of hard work, but you can't be stupid either. You... you just can't.I disagree completely. I have concluded after years of living on campus that higher degrees don't have anything to do with intelligence they just have to do with willingness to work. So as long as someone has at least competent intelligence and is willing to do the work he can get an advanced degree. (And yes I include JD and MD in that statement).
You know what they call the person who graduates first in their class in Journalism School?You know what they call the person who graduates last in their class in Med School?
"Doctor"
I'm guessing you don't like the way it's used.Wait...what does "competent" mean? If it actually means "competent", then I should hope that anyone of "competent" intelligence should be able to graduate, since that's kind of the meaning of the word.
Yeah. Competent does not mean above average it simply means competent. I have no idea why chaz decided it means stupid since no one has said anything about stupid in the entire conversation.Wait...what does "competent" mean? If it actually means "competent", then I should hope that anyone of "competent" intelligence should be able to graduate, since that's kind of the meaning of the word.